David Guterson Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of David Guterson's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Novelist David Guterson's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 50 quotes on this page collected since May 4, 1956! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
All quotes by David Guterson: Books Literature Writing more...
  • None of those other things makes a difference. Love is the strongest thing in the world, you know. Nothing can touch it. Nothing comes close. If we love each other we're safe from it all. Love is the biggest thing there is.

    David Guterson (2009). “Snow Falling on Cedars”, p.109, A&C Black
  • I grew up in Seattle, but I always knew I wanted to leave.

  • That the world was silent and cold and bare and that in this lay its terrible beauty

    David Guterson (2009). “Snow Falling on Cedars”, p.224, A&C Black
  • He decided then that he would love her forever no matter what came to pass. It was not so much a matter of deciding as accepting the inevitability of it. It made him feel better, though he felt perturbed, too, worried that this kiss was wrong. But from his point of view, at fourteen years old, their love was entirely unavoidable. It had started on the day they'd clung to his glass box and kissed in the sea, and now it must go on forever. He felt certain of this.

    David Guterson (2009). “Snow Falling on Cedars”, p.56, A&C Black
  • Cities produce in me melancholy or a tension I don't need.

  • Hemingway said the only way to write about a place is to leave it.

  • The status quo was rote memorization and recitation in classrooms thronged with passive children who were sternly disciplined when they expressed individual needs.

    David Guterson (1992). “Family matters: why homeschooling makes sense”, Harcourt
  • Everybody has a world, and that world is completely hidden until we begin to inquire. As soon as we do, that entire world opens to us and yields itself. And you see how full and complex it is.

  • The strange thing was, he wanted to like everyone. He just couldn't find a way to do it.

    David Guterson (2009). “Snow Falling on Cedars”, p.25, A&C Black
  • accident ruled every corner of the universe except the chambers of the human heart.

    David Guterson (2009). “Snow Falling on Cedars”, p.233, A&C Black
  • It's a brooding melancholy that haunts me.

  • I write because something inner and unconscious forces me to. That is the first compulsion. The second is one of ethical and moral duty. I feel responsible to tell stories that inspire readers to consider more deeply who they are.

  • The real question is: How do you react? What do you do next? Evade responsibilities? Bury yourself in work? What do you do? All three of my novels take up that question, although none gives an answer.

  • Post-modernism is dead because it didn't address human needs.

  • Even though I may not intend it when I set out to write the book, these places just emerge as major players in what I'm doing, almost as if they are insisting on it.

  • What some people interpret as brooding melancholy is serenity. I don't feel required to grasp all the time.

  • Don Quixote is one that comes to mind in comparison to mine, in that they both involve journeys undertaken by older men. That is unusual, because generally the hero of a journey story is very young.

  • To persevere is always a reflection of the state of one's inner life, one's philosophy and one's perspective

    David Guterson (2009). “Snow Falling on Cedars”, p.105, A&C Black
  • I was born in Washington State and have lived here for 42 plus years.

  • I know you'll think this is crazy, but all I want to do is hold you, and I think that if you'll let me do that just for a few seconds, I can walk away, and never speak to you again.

    "Fictional character: Ishmael Chambers". "Snow Falling on Cedars", www.imdb.com. 1999.
  • We should recognize that schools will never solve the bedrock problems of education because the problems are problems of families, of cultural pressures that the schools reflect and thus cannot really remedy.

    "When Schools Fail Children: An English Teacher Educates His Kids at Home". Harper's Magazine, November 1990.
  • Writers shouldn’t underestimate the difficulty of what they’re doing, and they should treat it with great seriousness. You’re doing something that really matters, you’re telling stories that have an impact on other people and on the culture. You should tell the best stories you can possibly tell and put everything you’ve got into it.

  • How could they say that they truly loved each other? They had simply grown up together, been children together, and the proximity of it, the closeness of it, had produced in them love s illusion. And yet - on the other hand - what was love if it wasn't this instinct she felt.

  • Fiction is socially meaningful.

  • Well, I think it’s extraordinarily fun to write, and I look forward to it every day, but that doesn’t mean I think it’s easy. There’s a difference between the two. It’s fun in the way all worthwhile things are fun – there’s difficulty attached to it. I think that a writer has to accept a certain amount of frustration. It’s inherent in the task, and you have to simply persevere. It’s part of the definition of the work.

  • When it comes time to sit down and write the next book, you're deathly afraid that you're not up to the task. That was certainly the case with me after Snow Falling on Cedars.

  • I'm a hypocrite, of course, and I live with that, but I live.

    David Guterson (2012). “The Other”, p.214, A&C Black
  • To deny that there was this dark side of life would be like pretending that the cold of winter was somehow only a temporary illusion, a way station on the way to the higher "reality" of long, warm, pleasant summers. But summer, it turned out, was no more real than the snow that melted in wintertime.

    David Guterson (2009). “Snow Falling on Cedars”, p.105, A&C Black
  • There's a certain nostalgia and romance in a place you left.

  • I was aware that there is an expectation that writers inevitably falter at this stage, that they fail to live up to the promise of their first successful book, that the next book never pleases the way the prior one did. It simply increased my sense of being challenged.

Page 1 of 2
  • 1
  • 2
  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 50 quotes from the Novelist David Guterson, starting from May 4, 1956! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
    David Guterson quotes about: Books Literature Writing